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| xfwl4_faq [2026/01/30 11:17] – kelnos | xfwl4_faq [2026/01/30 11:20] (current) – kelnos | ||
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| In reality, that won't quite be the case. Some desktop environment concepts are just not standardized on Wayland, and aren't implementable. | In reality, that won't quite be the case. Some desktop environment concepts are just not standardized on Wayland, and aren't implementable. | ||
| - | === How can I contribute? === | + | ===== How can I contribute? |
| At this point, you shouldn' | At this point, you shouldn' | ||
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| For now, also please do not file any issues, feature requests, or merge requests on the Gitlab issue tracker. | For now, also please do not file any issues, feature requests, or merge requests on the Gitlab issue tracker. | ||
| - | === Ok, so when is the preview release? === | + | ===== Ok, so when is the preview release? |
| I'm aiming for sometime in the middle of 2026. No hard date, and things can change, but I do want to get something usable into people' | I'm aiming for sometime in the middle of 2026. No hard date, and things can change, but I do want to get something usable into people' | ||
| - | === What's going to happen to xfwm4 and X11 support? === | + | ===== What's going to happen to xfwm4 and X11 support? |
| xfwm4 will continue to work as an X11 window manager as it always has. Xfce should continue to run on X11, and there are no plans currently to drop support, or change things so parts of the desktop only run properly on Wayland. | xfwm4 will continue to work as an X11 window manager as it always has. Xfce should continue to run on X11, and there are no plans currently to drop support, or change things so parts of the desktop only run properly on Wayland. | ||
| - | === Why Rust? === | + | ===== Why Rust? ===== |
| The usual reasons: not having to deal with memory safety issues or data races; strong, expressive type system; algebraic data types; ability to sprinkle functional programming throughout; strong community; etc. But mainly, I (Brian) just prefer it over C, and I'm not interested in starting a new C project. | The usual reasons: not having to deal with memory safety issues or data races; strong, expressive type system; algebraic data types; ability to sprinkle functional programming throughout; strong community; etc. But mainly, I (Brian) just prefer it over C, and I'm not interested in starting a new C project. | ||
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| (You may disagree that Rust is better-suited than C here; my view is a subjective one, after all. That's fine, but this decision is not up for further debate, and comments about the choice of Rust are boring and will not lead to productive or useful discussion.) | (You may disagree that Rust is better-suited than C here; my view is a subjective one, after all. That's fine, but this decision is not up for further debate, and comments about the choice of Rust are boring and will not lead to productive or useful discussion.) | ||
| - | === Is all of Xfce being rewritten in Rust? === | + | ===== Is all of Xfce being rewritten in Rust? ===== |
| No, definitely not. RiiR (" | No, definitely not. RiiR (" | ||
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| For some extra detail here: if you're not aware, Xfce is made up of quite a few different components, each of which are separate programs. | For some extra detail here: if you're not aware, Xfce is made up of quite a few different components, each of which are separate programs. | ||
| - | === Why wasn't it feasible to base this work on the existing xfwm4 code? === | + | ===== Why wasn't it feasible to base this work on the existing xfwm4 code? ===== |
| I tried this, back in 2024. The idea was to refactor things so that xfwm4' | I tried this, back in 2024. The idea was to refactor things so that xfwm4' | ||